877: A Sacrificial Escape

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KODY 105
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877: A Sacrificial Escape

Post by KODY 105 »

This episode broadcast on 2022-01-18.
Episode summary
Emily and Matthew are trapped inside an unfinished escape room in the basement of Whit's End. A mysterious voice insists that the two of them must play a game called "Search for Your Life" to get out.
My thoughts
Some creep has cracked the Whit's End electronic infrastructure and threatens children: He tells the kids that he trapped in an incomplete escape room that they have to choose one person to get the oxygen which imples that the other will die.

I've already been spoiled by some of the other folks here. WTFridge?! And then everybody just calls it a night and goes home. If it was nighttime, where were the parents of the kids: shouldn't those kids be at home already? And supposedly Whit knows who is behind this? I would expect that Whit will make sure this sort of thing never happens again: trapped people in a basement without any tools to get out.

Wasn't interesting, uplifting, or educational. I suppose this is as close to torture porn as a children's show can get. SHAME ON YOU, BOB HOOSE.

1/5
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Bob
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Post by Bob »

This includes spoilers for not only this episode, but future episodes in the Rydell saga.
This episode, like few others, is strongly influenced by how the plot was ultimately developed.

At the time, when it came out, it upped the ante and solidly established Rydell's credentials as an evil, Blackgaard-esque villain. It sounds funny to say that people didn't mind Emily and Matthew being locked in an escape room and threatened, but I think it's true that people didn't mind it as a plot, if they knew that it was only another evil scheme that happened to the protagonists, with nobody but the main villain to blame, and that justice would ultimately be done.

If the plot turned out the way fans expected - Emily (perhaps with actual help from Whit) cracks the case and Rydell is held accountable for his crimes - I expect the focus here would be on Emily and Matthew's relationship, and it would be as memorable an episode as "The Battle" or some other classic, for similar reasons.

It's still memorable, but in the opposite way: now the focus is on the facts that 1) Morrie did something very wrong ("demented", to use Whit's own words in this episode), 2) Whit did absolutely nothing to stop it, while pretending he was clueless for weeks on end, before and after, and 3) people would rather gaslight Em than acknowledge that Morrie did wrong. Later episodes, especially Rydell Revelations Part 2 and 3, get most of the blame for those things. However, this episode still has a role in this fiasco, because up until this episode, Morrie hadn't yet done anything quite so bad that we couldn't conceivably imagine him getting off with an apology.

If you could look at this episode from when it was the latest episode in the ongoing Rydell saga, I suspect it'd rate a 5. If you look at it after knowing what happens in Rydell Revelations, Parts 2, and especially 3, it's not hard to understand why someone would feel the rating should be the opposite. I'm inclined to keep the rating I had for it when I first heard it, on the technical grounds that the saga wasn't ruined until later, but the writers have well-earned decisively negative feedback.
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